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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 24
November 2004
Press Release No: L/65/2004
SECRETARY-GENERAL HAILS WOMEN AS MOST COURAGEOUS,
CREATIVE CHAMPIONS IN FIGHT AGAINST HIV/AIDS, IN WORLD AIDS
DAY MESSAGE
Following is Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s message on
World AIDS Day, observed on 1 December:
This year’s World AIDS Day is an occasion
to recognize the burden that women and girls bear in the age
of HIV/AIDS, but equally, to celebrate their achievements in
the fight against the epidemic.
Women are our most courageous and creative champions
in the fight against HIV/AIDS. In most countries and communities
I have visited around the world, it is women’s voices
that are heard above all others; women advocates and activists
who are moved to act selflessly and speak publicly, often risking
prejudice, abuse or violence, in order to improve the lives
of others.
The courage that women are showing in this fight
is matched only by the toll the disease is taking on them. Women
already bear the brunt of poverty. AIDS makes the poverty trap
even easier for them to fall into, and even harder to break.
Women continue to face discrimination on a number of fronts
-- from the workplace to laws governing land ownership and inheritance.
AIDS puts them at even greater risk. Girls already make up the
majority of children not in school. When AIDS strikes the family,
those girls who are attending school are all too often taken
out, to help run the household and care for sick relatives.
Women now account for about half of all people living with HIV
worldwide. In sub-Saharan Africa, where more than three quarters
of all HIV-positive women live, almost
57 per cent of adults living with HIV are women.
Why are women more vulnerable to infection? Why
is that so, even where
they are not the ones with the most sexual partners outside
marriage, nor more likely than men to be injecting drug users?
Usually, it is because society’s inequalities put them
at risk -- unjust, unconscionable risk. A range of factors conspires
to make this so: poverty, abuse and violence, lack of information,
coercion by older men, and men having several concurrent sexual
relationships that entrap young women in a giant network of
infection. Nor does marriage always offer protection: in some
heavily affected countries, married women have higher rates
of HIV infection than their unmarried, sexually active peers.
These factors cannot be addressed piecemeal. What
is needed is real, positive change that will give more power
and confidence to women and girls. Change that will transform
relations between women and men at all levels of society. Change
that can only be brought about through the education of girls,
through legal and social reforms, and through greater awareness
and responsibility among men. Change that will allow women to
play to the full their role in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Empowering
women in this struggle must be our strategy for the future.
It is among them that the real heroes of this war are to be
found. It is our job to furnish them with hope.
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